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GRASinBothell

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Posts posted by GRASinBothell

  1. Nearholmer's reference to "a name made-up by C19th property developers to sound posh" reminds me of something I've noticed over here in the US. Sometimes, a property developer will use the proper English, rather than the American-English spelling for words like "Harbour" and "Centre" in the name of their developments. I have always assumed that must have been good for an extra dollar per square foot on the rent...

    Gordon

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  2. Edwardian,

    The original Mr Walker (actually, Mr Skywalker) after whom Walker was named was a Jedi Knight, so no, he wasn't a grocer. As regards apostrophe crimes, did station names ever include apostrophes? You won't find one in Parsons Green, for example:

    image.png.8f653ac880399acca26089337ead6322.png

    Nearholmer,

    No, nothing so fancy (or expensive!). They are from JTT Scenery Products (http://miniaturetree.com/landscaping-detailing/43-sunflowers.html).

    They make a lot of flowers and vegetables in O and HO scales, and you can find them in a lot of hobby/craft shops over here (not just specialist train ones). The flowers (and leaves) are paper. I did share a picture of the flower bed with Allen.

    Hmm... Still hoping someone can point me to a 1/43 scale Pembroke or Cardigan Corgi. Like most of us (I suspect), there is no shortage of the diecast kind of Corgi...

    Gordon

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  3. Returning to the dog theme (this IS a dog forum, right???), and having mentioned Walker, and the station I've named after him, I thought I'd add a photo of the running-in board, with Mr and Mrs Mountbatten-Windsor waiting for a train (along with a strangely-young Mr Churchill).

    43566900_SmallDSCN0213.JPG.5fce6653ee686bcb703fd67ef7135fd7.JPG

    The 3 dogs are from an Arttista pack (called Junk Yard dogs), containing a German Shepherd (Alsation for those on the other side of the Pond), a Rottweiler, and a Doberman - appropriate since Walker was a Doberman. Of course, the Mountbatten-Windsors should really be surrounded by Corgis, but I haven't been able to find a 1/43 scale one of those!

    In the background, King Arthur class no 30456 Sir Galahad brings The Cunarder into the station.

    Gordon

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  4. It's a nice name - short, easy to say, and, most importantly, not embarrassing when you're calling her to come in from the garden.

    Dog naming can be a strange process. My daughter christened her first dog Lord Adonis Skywalker the Third. He was always known as Walker, and I took him for many walks in the park, so my Ace station has nameboards for "Walkers Park"!

    Gordon

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  5. I consulted the authority on Great Western wagons ("GWR Goods Wagons", by Atkins, Beard and Tourret), and the author noted there that he had no idea why they added "improvised", since there was no meaningful distinction between regular Gunpowder Vans (CONES in GWR parlance) and these conversions. There is an official photo of one marked for the GWR and one for the Southern, and he surmised that only the two in the official photos may have been so marked.

    And for anyone fighting the urge to go tinplate, don't fight it - it is a splendid place to be...

    Gordon

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  6. I believe the "Improvised" Gunpowder Vans were just standard iron minks converted for use as gunpowder vans. I don't know whether the "Improvised" implied some kind of limit on how much or what kinds of explosive could be loaded in them. Since the standard gunpowder design (even other companies' ones) was based on the GW iron mink, I can't imagine there could have been a lot of difference.

    Gordon

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  7. On the modules I take to shows over here, the standard track positioning (to fit with other group modules) didn't leave room to fit a French Hornby Passage à Niveau (level crossing), so I have a small extension piece that I bolt on, thus providing the room.

    You could do something similar. The baseboard would then be the size you want for storage, and would have a small overhang when in use...

    Gordon

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  8. I also have one of those Ace/Horton gunpowder vans (as well as a couple of pre-grouping ones - North British & Caledonian). A Rectank (which no one makes, at least not in the tinplate world; there is probably a finescale etched kit available!) would be nice, but the WJ Vintage/Raylo bogie bolster at least allows for some suitable military loads.

    What's the source of the Southern brake van? The South Western made some of their standard road vans for the WD during WW1, and I live in hope for one of those...

    Gordon

  9. Perhaps that's the problem with going to school in Folkestone. We used to see lots of them (50s/60s) having just arrived on the ferry. I suppose I assumed they also plied their trade in their home country.

    Of course, being in Folkestone, with the school playing fields alongside the old South Eastern main line, also exposed me to Bulleid Pacifics hauling long trains of STEF and Interfrigo vans that had arrived on the ferry. I have a small number of Hornby and JeP STEF vans to run behind my Ace West Country.

    Gordon

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  10. I was intrigued that on the French incarnation of your new layout, one of the buildings was marked "Station BV". DV I could understand as hoping for divine intervention to get you a nice tinplate French station building, but BV?

    You could have a location for a signal box, and with suitable different inserts to hide their bases, change between Hornby and JeP ones.

    I see you also have a plan for a man smoking Gauloises. If you can't find a suitable figure for that, how about one of these?

    733894661_SmallDSCN0188.JPG.1d65cf1331573a5003e20d1a407ff4ae.JPG

    They are Phoenix/S&D Models figures of onion sellers. The one without the bike actually has a cigarette in his mouth...

    Gordon

    • Like 6
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